government
FACTBOX: Cities awarded Russia’s New Year’s capital title
TASS has prepared this factbox on the project dubbed The New Year’s Capital of Russia
4 months ago
Government-aligned coverage of Ryazan as Russia’s “New Year’s Capital” consistently portrays the designation as a prestigious cultural and tourism project run by the Ministry of Culture since 2012, emphasizing the city’s strong cultural infrastructure and capacity to organize large-scale events. Reports agree that Ryazan will hold the title for the 2025–2026 season, that this is the second time since 2020 it has received the honor, and that the upcoming festivities will form part of the city’s 930th anniversary celebrations with a dense program of around 700 events from December 13, 2025, to January 10, 2026.
There is currently no identifiable opposition media coverage of Ryazan’s selection as the New Year’s Capital, so there are no explicit points of divergence in framing, tone, or criticism that can be directly compared with government narratives. In practice, this means that only the official, celebratory depiction—focusing on tourism promotion, cultural prestige, and large-scale festivities—is visible in the public record used here, while potential opposition themes such as budget scrutiny, regional inequality, or political symbolism around the title cannot be substantiated from available sources.
In sum, the narrative around Ryazan as Russia’s New Year’s Capital is currently shaped entirely by government-aligned sources, with broad agreement on its cultural and touristic importance and no clearly documented opposition framing to counterbalance or challenge that view.